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Robotics

Casio Made a Furry Robot Designed To Cuddle and Calm You Down (theverge.com) 63

Casio has opened preorders for Moflin, a cuddly robotic pet that "looks like a cross between a hamster and Star Trek's Tribbles," reports The Verge. The robot is priced at around $400 and is expected to ship on November 7th. From the report: Unlike Sony's robot dog Aibo that can follow you around, Moflin is designed to be held and cuddled, and over time, Casio says it will learn who you are and attempt to develop a simulated bond expressed through unique sounds and movements. Originally developed through a collaboration with a Japanese startup called Vanguard Industries, Moflin is now being manufactured and distributed by Casio. It can be preordered for [around $398 USD] and is expected to be available starting on November 7th. Casio is also offering an optional subscription service called Club Moflin for [about $44 USD] per year, which gets you a discount on repairs, cleanings, and even a complete fur replacement. Accidents happen.

Casio's Moflin isn't designed to be a play toy like Sony's Aibo. It's intended to be more of a comforting companion and potentially a tool to help improve your mental wellness, similar to Qoobo, the headless robotic cat. While being held, Moflin's limited head and body movements are supposed to make it feel like the furry robot is attempting to snuggle with you, and as with many devices debuting this year, there are some AI-powered features, too. Moflin is supposed to learn to recognize the person who interacts with it the most through their voice and the way they handle the bot, and it will respond with unique sounds and movements only expressed to that person to simulate a close bond.

The robot is also designed to develop its own simulated feelings and personality, which can change over time. With regular interactions, it will become happy, secure, and calm. If it's ignored, it can become stressed, anxious, and sad. But given the robot's limited emotive capabilities, it doesn't make sad sounds, or display an anxious wiggle, demonstrating those feelings. Its emotional state can only be determined through an app, making it feel almost like a very expensive Tamagotchi, minus any digital rewards for being a diligent caregiver. The app can also be used to turn down the volume of the sounds the robot makes.

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Casio Made a Furry Robot Designed To Cuddle and Calm You Down

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  • by Malay2bowman ( 10422660 ) on Monday October 14, 2024 @07:40PM (#64864819)
    But seeing how so many people have flipped their lid in America, and you have no idea how the other person is going to turn out, now or in the future, this really does not seem to be a bad idea. Not everyone can have a pet or a therapy animal for a myriad of reasons, and this might be the next best thing.
    • I'm convinced there is a therapy [bbc.com] animal [bbc.com] for everyone [bbc.com].
    • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Monday October 14, 2024 @08:14PM (#64864873)

      It sounds crazy, but these things do work, even when we know they are fake.
      People treat dogs like children, even though they know the difference.
      Or to be more vulgar, we know porn is just pixels on a screen, not flesh and blood, but we still respond.

      We really should be listening to the dystopian warnings about AI companions replacing real human relationships. [wikipedia.org]

      • "We really should be listening to the dystopian warnings about AI companions replacing real human relationships. [wikipedia.org]" It takes two to tango with this. Because of people are going to become to insufferable and untrustworthy in general, then yeah, AI stands a very good chance of winning this one. Maybe we need to clean out all of the anti-social behavior and ideas and all of the other mental crud amongst the general public so this does not come to pass.
        • "We really should be listening to the dystopian warnings about AI companions replacing real human relationships. [wikipedia.org]" It takes two to tango with this. Because of people are going to become to insufferable and untrustworthy in general, then yeah, AI stands a very good chance of winning this one. Maybe we need to clean out all of the anti-social behavior and ideas and all of the other mental crud amongst the general public so this does not come to pass.

          We're dealing with at least three generations of people raised on electronics. The computer generation is ramping that up way harder, and gamifying it, where these giant behemoth companies *need* eyeballs, and will, without any compunction, do anything to get them. Addiction to these companies is the name of the game, and getting them young and training them in is even more important. Try to take away the electronics from a teenager and watch. You get one of two responses: Complete listlessness, unable to c

      • There's something even worse than replacing human interaction with technology and it's replacing it with nothing. And I don't recall anyone really worrying about this.

    • To me it looks more like a rabbit vibrator hidden inside a golfclub cover.

      Add to that the fact you need an app to reveal the "emotional state" of your pet and you have the new version of a Tamagotchi, with data mining.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      But seeing how so many people have flipped their lid in America, and you have no idea how the other person is going to turn out, now or in the future, this really does not seem to be a bad idea. Not everyone can have a pet or a therapy animal for a myriad of reasons, and this might be the next best thing.

      That's all well and good...until these robotic fuzzballs kill us in our sleep!

    • Back in my day, children used security blankets to keep them from crying!
  • This will save my ex money, won't have to buy so much cat food and kitty litter.
    Will probably end up spending the money saved on batteries though.

  • This is October, not April

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      It's Japan. I don't ask questions.
    • This is October, not April

      Kinky is popular all year 'round.

    • I guess you are so close minded you can't understand the impact on a lonely human being of things like this. Maybe you have a large family, a lot of friends, but not everybody has, and not everybody can make friends easy. People talk to and love their cars as if it were a person.
  • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Monday October 14, 2024 @08:00PM (#64864853) Homepage

    Oh great, we'll have the furry fandom people going "They took 'ur jerbs!" now too.

  • ... attempting to snuggle with you ...

    That will appease the nurturing instinct of young and very old females. It is common practice to give mechanized plush toys to senile women.

  • They're called pets. And they work.

    Of course they require actual commitment because if you ignore then they'll die. And that might be related to why they work. Because of the responsibility to another living being.

    You ignore one of these (say it falls behind the couch) and all you have to do is change the battery. Not a big deal.

    So yes, there could be situations were one of these $400 gadgets is appropriate, but somehow it seems a whole lot more real to just get a live pet. It doesn't even need to be a d

    • Yes, a pet is more real and long existing "technology" - yet plushies exist because that "having a puppy is a big responsibility" has proven ineffective with 5 year olds since before recorded history.

      This is something in the middle - which may be overkill for very young children, but could be practical and effective for the elderly, for example.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Monday October 14, 2024 @09:22PM (#64864949)
    Learn something new every day.
    • Where have you been?

      They make watches, calculators. You cant go to school in 2024 without a casio calculator.

      Their retro watches are pretty popular and if you have the cash you can even have a gold one. Right now I can go to the local Argos and for only £10.99 buy a standard F91-W, same design for decades. It sells so well they havnt stopped making them.

    • Haha, I wear a modern smart watch made by Casio every day. It trickle charges via solar so hardly ever needs to be tethered to a charger.

  • Doesn't seem likely to produce healthy people. Just shell out gift gards to petting zoos as promotions instead of crap like this.
  • by Slashythenkilly ( 7027842 ) on Monday October 14, 2024 @09:39PM (#64864953)
    Didnt the Simpsons do an episode about a cuddleybot that gathered marketing info on its clients?
  • You can pamper pet for a year, that will show you genuine affection.

    • Except with this not being fed it only runs out of energy, when you forget feeding your pet it starved (to death). Live pets are more prone to cruelty. A lot of people aren't able to care for a l
  • Get a puppy?

    • by Bob_Who ( 926234 )

      Get a puppy?

      Perhaps its a pussy?

      • Get a puppy?

        Perhaps its a pussy?

        I'm going to assume you don't mean something pornographic.

        I'm allergic to cats. Besides, I'm not convinced cats feel genuine affection.

        • by HiThere ( 15173 )

          Cats do feel affection, but it's doesn't really drive them the way it does a social animal, like dogs or people.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      At my age that would be cruel. It would probably outlive me and then what?
      You could say that "well, it had a few good years", but I don't yet have an affection for it, and if I wanted to help those I don't already have an affection for, there are lots of people that depend on charities.

  • I knew about a similar seal creature pet that was made for the elderly and it did apparently have positive effects. I'm guessing this is targeted more at lonely working women. What I'm shocked about is that Vanguard actually attracted what looks like a million bucks through Kickstarted and Indiegogo to build this. Actually the Vanguard site is really interesting.

  • Just from that landing page I learned a lot about young Japanese women who need money so badly they agree to cuddle a twitch-duster.
  • Petster! Source of some of the worst cheesy plastic gear noises ever put into a household product.
  • We're getting there folks. As Elon Musk put it: "The future is going to be very weird."

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      IIUC, they already exist. They just need a bit of improvement. The problem is the intermediate stages are more expensive with minimal increase in effectiveness. (Large scale motion is expensive and tricky.) I'd give a link, but my google-fu isn't up to it. I keep getting movies or bands.

  • by Evtim ( 1022085 ) on Tuesday October 15, 2024 @06:20AM (#64865527)

    Encyclopedia Galactica defines a robot as a "mechanical device designed to do the work of a man".

    The marketing division of the Casio corporation defines a robot as"you furry pall who's fun to play with"

    The Hitchhikers guide to the Galaxy defines the Casio's marketing division as " a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first against the wall when the revolution comes".

    Curiously enough an edition of Encyclopedia Galactica that fell through a wormhole from 1000 years in the future defines Casio's marketing division as " a bunch of mindless jerks who were the first against the wall when the revolution came"

  • The thick fur will make it easy to add discreet aftermarket mods.
  • Really one of the saddest news I saw today.
  • #RoboticTribbleOverlords

  • c'mon people. I know you're all smarter than you let on.
  • ... be banned [wikipedia.org] by the NSA?

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